Epilobium canum subsp. latifolium

(Hooker) P. H. Raven

Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 63: 335. 1977.

Common names: Hummingbird trumpet
Basionym: Zauschneria californica var. latifolia Hooker Bot. Mag. 76: plate 4493. 1850
Synonyms: Z. argentea A. Nelson Z. arizonica Davidson Z. californica subsp. latifolia (Hooker) D. D. Keck Z. canescens Eastwood ex Moxley Z. crassifolia Rydberg Z. elegans Eastwood ex Moxley Z. hallii Moxley Z. latifolia (Hooker) Greene Z. latifolia var. arizonica (Davidson) Hilend Z. latifolia var. johnstonii Hilend Z. latifolia var. tomentella (Greene) Jepson Z. latifolia var. viscosa (Moxley) Jepson Z. pringlei Eastwood ex Moxley Z. pulchella Moxley Z. pulchella var. adpressa Moxley Z. tomentella Greene Z. viscosa Moxley
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 10.

Herbs not suffruticose. Stems 10–50(–70) cm, villous and short glandular-puberulent, mixed especially dis­tally, sometimes predominantly glandular puberulent, rarely glabrate. Leaves not fasciculate; blade green to grayish green, usually lanceolate to ovate or broadly elliptical, rarely orbiculate, 0.8–5(–6) × 0.4–1.8(–2.2) cm, margins subentire to distinctly denticulate, 4–10 teeth per side, veins obscure to pronounced, 3–6 per side, surfaces villous and glandular puberulent; bracts sometimes overlapping pedicels of flowers (and fruits). Flowers: floral tube 16–24 mm; sepals 6–9 mm; petals 7–9 mm. Capsules 8–22 mm; subsessile or pedicel 1–2 mm. Seeds 1.2–1.6 × 0.8–1.1 mm. 2n = 30, 60.


Phenology: Flowering Jun–Dec.
Habitat: Sandy or rocky soils in wood­land and montane areas, stabilized talus slopes, disturbed ravines, roadsides, granite cliffs, stream banks, stabilized gravel bars.
Elevation: (100–)1000–3200 m.

Distribution

Ariz., Calif., N.Mex., Oreg., Mexico (Baja California, Chihuahua, Sonora).

Discussion

As delimited by J. D. Clausen et al. (1940) and P. H. Raven (1976), subsp. latifolium was considered to be strictly tetraploid. However, at least one popula­tion from Arizona (Pima County, Yatskievych s.n. in 1978, MO, count by S. Seavey) was diploid.

Although subsp. latifolium occurs primarily in the Sierra Nevada and Northwestern California subdivisions (B. G. Baldwin et al. 2012) from 1500–3200 m, or in the southern Vancouverian Province as defined by R. F. Thorne (1993d), it is also found at higher elevation in the Pacific Coast Ranges (Central Western and Southwestern California subdivisions). It extends eastward into the Sonoran Province into central and southeastern Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, and Sonora and western Chihuahua, Mexico. In most areas where subsp. latifolium occurs in proximity to subsp. canum, the former occurs at higher elevations.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Peter C. Hoch +
(Hooker) P. H. Raven +
Zauschneria californica var. latifolia +
Hummingbird trumpet +
Ariz. +, Calif. +, N.Mex. +, Oreg. +, Mexico (Baja California +, Chihuahua +  and Sonora). +
(100–)1000–3200 m. +
Sandy or rocky soils in woodland and montane areas, stabilized talus slopes, disturbed ravines, roadsides, granite cliffs, stream banks, stabilized gravel bars. +
Flowering Jun–Dec. +
Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. +
Z. argentea +, Z. arizonica +, Z. californica subsp. latifolia +, Z. canescens +, Z. crassifolia +, Z. elegans +, Z. hallii +, Z. latifolia +, Z. latifolia var. arizonica +, Z. latifolia var. johnstonii +, Z. latifolia var. tomentella +, Z. latifolia var. viscosa +, Z. pringlei +, Z. pulchella +, Z. pulchella var. adpressa +, Z. tomentella +  and Z. viscosa +
Epilobium canum subsp. latifolium +
Epilobium canum +
subspecies +